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Description

How operator trust, patient capital, and integrated platforms turn defense technology into fielded capability

Guest: Justin MacLaurin - Founder & CEO, Digital Force Technologies

Justin MacLaurin has built, sold, bought back, and scaled a defense technology company focused on real operator needs. In this episode, Justin and Callye discuss sensor fusion, edge compute, counter-UAS, SOCOM acquisition speed, and why defense startups must build complete capabilities, not isolated widgets.

Topics

Takeaways

Timestamped Highlights

[00:00] - Introducing Justin MacLaurin and DFT

[00:44] - Technology and military operations as the core passion

[01:20] - Why sensor fusion is reaching an inflection point

[04:00] - From video surveillance to edge compute and battlefield data

[06:42] - Translating operator needs at Naval Special Warfare

[08:00] - The unmet need for rapid tactical technology development

[09:00] - Building DFT around mission relevance

[10:12] - Selling to BBN and crossing the Valley of Death internally

[11:20] - Raytheon integration and the shift from startup speed

[12:35] - Buying DFT back and rebooting the company

[16:28] - Choosing scale over a lifestyle business

[17:30] - Partnering with DC Capital Partners

[18:52] - Moving from SOCOM to larger service programs

[19:39] - Patient capital and defense market realities

[23:29] - Startup culture as a mentality, not a size

[24:00] - Helping startups wrap technology for military use

[25:30] - Drone manufacturing, scale, and solving the right problem

[26:30] - The Seraphim platform and rapid sensor integration

[28:27] - Avoiding overinvestment in non-core technology

[31:47] - Marketing, OPSEC, and the modern defense tech noise floor

[33:30] - Building a trust contract with operators

[34:27] - Closing thoughts on fielded capability

Connect

Justin MacLaurin | LinkedIn

Callye Keen | LinkedIn

Advanced Sensing Technology | Digital Force Technologies